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Elvin Jones The Legend Only Grows On
the eve of his seventy-fifth birthday, Elvin Ray Jones exhibits
the
relaxed demeanor and lean physique of a weathered--but still
dangerous--championship athlete. When he smiles, which is
often, he
still looks like he's twenty-five. His sense of humor is sharp, his
intellect acute. And as anyone who has seen
him perform on what seems
like a never-ending world tour will tell you, Elvin is still the man,
a drummer of incredible
prowess, facility, and earthquake-rendering
swing. He's a musician who carries with him the weight of history, but
who
always works in the moment, summoning a sound that is one of the
great musical phenomenons of our time.
Elvin
Jones' awesome influence--and his status as perhaps the greatest
living practitioner of jazz drumming and one who has
raised the art
form while bridging the gap between hard bop and avant-garde--cannot be
overstated. Listen to the drummers
who have followed in his wake and
who continue to explore his singular innovations within their own work.
From heavy hitters
like Jack DeJohnette, Adam Nussbaum, and Jeff "Tain"
Watts, to such younger flames as Brian Blade, Eric Harland, and
Nasheet
Waits, his unique contributions continue to resonate. Just as
influential an instrumentalist as his mentor John
Coltrane, Elvin Jones
is a supreme archetype for today's musicians and for generations of
musicians to
come.
"What impressed me about Elvin was his commitment to play the drums in
a different way," Jack DeJohnette
states. "Everyone played a lot
differently after he came on the scene. He loosened everything up.
Elvin is precise but loose at
the same time. He is an organic drummer,
a very spiritual drummer. His feeling, along with his drive, is quite
different. And
Elvin is still playing great today. He's one of our
masters, a national treasure. I love him."
Elvin's
drumming has gone through many stages, from the gritty hard-bop
of the early Coltrane recordings on Atlantic, to the
hurricane-force
implosions of such Impulse records as A Love Supreme, Crescent, and Sunship, to his sublime
work as the leader of Elvin Jones' Jazz Machine on the albums Merry Go Round, Dear John C, and Heavy
Sounds.
Along the way Elvin has enlivened the music of Wayne Shorter, Larry
Young, Freddie Hubbard, Tommy
Flanagan, and McCoy Tyner. With Mosaic's
recent Complete Blue Note Elvin Jones Session box set,
plus
numerous new recordings with the contemporary titans of jazz, such as
Michael Brecker, Bill Frisell, and Joe Lovano,
Elvin Jones' influence
remains undeniable and overwhelming.
"Playing with Elvin was a dream of a lifetime
for me," says saxophonist
Joe Lovano. In addition to playing with Elvin many times, Lovano
employed him for his record
Trio Fascination, Volume 1.
"Elvin plays with the most beautiful sense of feeling and taste. He has
such a command of
his instrument, and he's so spontaneous. It's a
perfect, beautiful balance of his polyrhythmic approach and his
own
sound and expression. Plus the meaning of what he plays comes out in
every little accent. He feels so much inner
music."
Relaxing in his Upper West Side apartment, dressed in a colorful
Japanese robe and smoking small Davidoff
cigars, Elvin greets a guest
like an old friend. (His handshake is a vice grip.) His living room is
filled with unusual dolls and art
gleaned from his world travels, such
as an African bust given to him by Carlos Santana. Elvin and his wife
Keiko are gracious
hosts of the old school: After we talked, the couple
laid out a course of snacks and drinks. And then, later on, we
visited
Elvin's second apartment, where we viewed the motherlode of old K
Zildjian cymbals, vintage drums, and pictures
of Elvin with various
world dignitaries and famous musicians.
Elvin moves a little slower these days than in the heady
1960s. But his
playing is still vital, glowing with an otherworldly gravity that seems
to emanate from some place beyond
knowing, a plane of deeper insight
and higher communication where most mortals never enter. But tell that
to the ever modest
Elvin, and he'll smile and laugh, "You must be
talking about someone else."
Ken Micallef and John Riley
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